Huch - ICE pünktlich und freundliches, tiefenentspanntes Zugpersonal. daran könnte ich mich wirklich gewöhnen.
Hoffentlich bleibt es so...
If you don't have an RSS feed you don't have a podcast.
And that is a hill I will die on.
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Earthly - Make Builds Super Simple
Fast, consistent builds with an instantly familiar syntax – like Dockerfile and Makefile had a baby. Write builds once, and run them anywhere – on your laptop, remote, and in any CI. Great for monorepos and polyrepos. Open source, 9000+ stars.earthly.dev
The Internet is decentralised by nature, and could be an entirely different world if ISPs weren't so hostile to self-hosting.
Imagine simple home appliances to host your email, blog or XMPP server.
Just buy a domain and configure a little device in your closet.
The tech is all feasible, but your ISP will refuse to give you a fixed IP or to unblock ports for this to work.
Community management.
Its work, and someone should be being paid to do it professionally.
The brief is simple, work out who is the expected constituency of gnome software and actively include those voices in the entire stack of development. Build community and if possible, economy between the workers and the users.
Ignoring users is useful for solving some sets of problems, but creates many long term social issues. Gnome is not the only project with this problem.
jako jo, kdybych byl bez peněz tak jo to je pravda.
edit: Starobrno neviem či nie je lepšie náhodou
How to start an email (with examples) | Tuta
How to start an email (formal & informal), and the dos and don'ts of email greetings.Tuta
Tomorrow is Global Encryption Day! 🥳🎉 Celebrate with us and #win ONE year of Legend for free!!! 🎁
Can you guess how many % of Tuta emails are sent end-to-end encrypted? Comment below! 🔒
We'll announce the numbers and the one who guessed it on #GEC Day. ❤️
#GED2023 #GlobalEncryptionDay #Win
This: #antiracist vs "not racist".
If you want to start on that education, I really recommend reading "So You Want To Talk About Race" by Ijeoma Oluo.
I've previously recommended "White Fragility" by Robin DiAngelo, which was good as an initial bridge - a white person talking to white people why they should care to be antiracist. But she's since turned that into a whole white savior consultant business, which is gross.
Ijeoma Oluo though? Her words as another woman of color _gave me breathing space_. She wrote all the things that I'm too exhausted to bring up with my white friends anymore. She wrote that, so the rest of us BIPOC don't have to anymore - it's a book of empowerment like that, in a big way.
And this is why I implore everyone to read that book, even if you need "White Fragility" as a stepping stone first.
Grandma used the word “whatsome” a lot. I've never heard anyone else say it. I often wonder where it came from.
Curiously, the Oxford Dictionary defines it as an obsolete #MiddleEnglish word meaning “whatever” that hasn't been used in over 500 years.
“Whatsome” was Grandma's “whatchamacallit”. She could also say “and whatsome” in the sense of “and so on”.
Incidentally, Oxford recognises “whatsomever” as a surviving #dialect word.
#Bitwarden is no longer free software.
The new code introduces a dependency on @bitwarden/sdk-internal
, whose license explicitly states that it can’t be used by any software other than Bitwarden.
That violates the freedom 0 of free software (I can do whatever I want with the source code as long as my output is also free and open).
This seems to be part of a long strategy from Bitwarden to gradually pull the rug under their “free and open” principles and turn the product into a closed product after gaining sufficient market share.
And it’s a reminder that open projects maintained by companies should never, ever, ever be trusted.
In my case I already moved to Vaultwarden a while ago. I had a hunch that Bitwarden was going in this direction, plus running 15 .NET containers on my box just to run a password manager seemed pure insanity to me.
I advise everyone to move away from Bitwarden too before it’s too late.
github.com/bitwarden/clients/i…
Desktop version 2024.10.0 is no longer free software · Issue #11611 · bitwarden/clients
Pull request #10974 introduces the @bitwarden/sdk-internal dependency which is needed to build the desktop client. The dependency contains a licence statement which contains the following clause: Y...GitHub
They have all the pop into your mouth chewability of sweets with the slightly unpalatable reality of salami
Watching Bluesky become a massive stream of pics without alt text as people basically beg people to add it... "We really value alt text here!"
Yeah, when millions of people suddenly flood a space, who "we" is changes right fucking quick, doesn't it?
Remember when folks over there made fun of Mastodon for people asking for content warnings and alt text?
Now they're begging people to mark NSFW picture and art while alt text is basically being ignored by almost all new users.
Idk y'all, sometimes folks on Fedi may be wound a little tight, but we sure did make sure the community we had here was tight and gave a fuck.
DXMD jsem hrál 4x, DXHR asi taktéž - ale nedokázal jsem porazit prvního bosse
I'm reasonably selective about what podcasts or radio to listen to, what fora to engage in, what to read online, etc., although there are probably some that I could remove without loss of substantial value.
I prioritize creation over consumption in general.
calnewport.com/on-digital-mini…
#Digital Minimalism #SocialMedia
On Digital Minimalism - Cal Newport
The Curmudgeonly Optimist People are sometimes confused about my personal relationship with digital communication technologies. On the one hand, I’m a computer scientist who studies and improves these tools. ... Read moreStudy Hacks (Cal Newport)
So, I, a half-Canadian/half-German/half-Chinese/all-bad-at-math woman go out to dinner with my Chinese personal trainer after working out and we wind up eating Lebanese food made by Syrians in the middle of China in a pop-up restaurant that has a Palestinian flag and a sticker on the door in support of Palestine.
While listening to German music.
I love living in Wuhan!
bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cy0grk…
TV BRA: Inside the world’s first TV station for and by people with learning disabilities
All the reporters at Norway's TV BRA are disabled or autistic.William Kremer (BBC News)
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Sharing new research, models, and datasets from Meta FAIR
Today, Meta FAIR is releasing several new research artifacts in support of our goal of achieving advanced machine intelligence (AMI) while also supporting open science and reproducibility.ai.meta.com
Some random thoughts, but I sometimes feel there are two different and mutually exclusive strands of techno-optimism about computers. I'm referring here to people who want to use computers to liberate, not to the claim that this has already been achieved.
On one hand, what we could call the Smalltalk strand. Don't get hang up on the name: it might as well be Lisp or Unix or free software or Emacs strand. This is the most radical position, and holds that computers are 1) sui generis (their own thing), 2) and the full potential of computing is the common heritage of humanity. So this is the view of infinite customisability, of trusting that users can, should and will write their own software and tweaks.
The other version is the Apple strand: again don't get hang up on the name. This is an optimistic but less radical position that computers are universally able to substitute every other machine, but that they should behave like the machines they substitute for the sake of simplicity and ease of use. So while the Smalltalk strand looks at computers as their own special thing that brings new affordances, the Apple strand focuses on making computers useful for specific tasks, with an appropriate UI.
I think both are legitimate views. My sympathies are more with the Smalltalk strand, and I find it frustrating when it is seen as elitist or exclusionary, because our precise point is everyone can program, and that software should be optimised for modifiability. On the other hand, the Apple strand gets accused of dumbing down, which I also think is not warranted.
What I?m trying to get at is we can work on both visions, though inevitably there are points of divergence. Computers should be general purpose, flexible and customisable. People should be able to modify their own systems to suit their needs. But also, computers should be manageable and easily understood, and it should be possible for people to use them.
I agree that pretty much everyone could learn it if they put in enough work, but a lot of people would rather do something else with their time and have computers "just work".
Speaking as a programmer, that's why I've stuck with Windows so far instead of getting into Linux more than necessary...
What's your favourite punctuation?
- Semicolon (;) (36%, 22 votes)
- En dash (–) (26%, 16 votes)
- Question mark (?) (13%, 8 votes)
- Exlamation mark (!) (24%, 15 votes)
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Zitra nas ceka velky Unreleased den. Dva nove Unreleasy jejichz Unrelease oslavime vypustenim noveho webu. (driv to nejde, neb tam s nimi flexime)
Jako znamka toho, ze to s umelci myslime vazne jsme se placli pres kapsu a natocili reklamni video.
Je pekne.
Nalakame na nej Justina? Uvidime.
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